pedantry

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Italian pedanteria, equivalent to pedant +‎ -ry. Compare also French pédanterie.

Pronunciation

Noun

pedantry (countable and uncountable, plural pedantries)

  1. An excessive attention to detail or rules.
    • 1869, Alexander John Ellis, “III. On the Pronunciation of English in the Sixteenth Century, and its Gradual Change during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries”, in On Early English Pronunciation, with Especial Reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer , volume I, London: Published for the Philological Society by Asher & Co., page 202:
      Another point on which Smart insists is the distinction between serf and surf [] A distinction can of course be made, and without much difficulty, by those who think of it, and is made by those who have formed a habit of doing so; but the distinction is so rarely made as to amount almost to pedantry []
    1. An instance of such behaviour.
      I don’t want to listen to your pedantries anymore.
  2. An overly ambitious display of learning.

Quotations

  • 1695, A Reply to the Second Defence of the XXVIII Propositions, Said to Be Wrote in Answer to a Socinian Manuscript, London, page 3:
    I am adviſed to paſs by whatever does not concern the Cauſe, to bear the Imputation of affected Pœdantry, Ignorance and Arrogance.

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Further reading